Collaborative Hacking for OWS Research :: The New School :: Hackathon, March 23-24, 2012 :: www.searchunderoccupy.org

We will be showcasing some of our outcomes from the OccupyData Hackathon in NYC and outcomes from groups around the country at OWS Archive Day this weekend at Eyebeam. Please join us! OWS Archive Day is at March 31, 2012

We will be showcasing some of our outcomes from the OccupyData Hackathon in NYC and outcomes from groups around the country at OWS Archive Day this weekend at Eyebeam. Please join us! OWS Archive Day is at March 31, 2012

Initial sketch of the themes that emerge from “Q42. What are you trying to achieve with your participation in the Occupy Movement?” Our first attempt to develop categories of framing themes follows below. The themes are listed in bold and

Initial sketch of the themes that emerge from “Q42. What are you trying to achieve with your participation in the Occupy Movement?” Our first attempt to develop categories of framing themes follows below. The themes are listed in bold and

How do we make sense of specific events occurring during the Occupy movement through narratives emerging from social media over time? When an NYPD office pepper sprays peaceful protestors, the event is immediately captured on camera phones with subsequent citizen

How do we make sense of specific events occurring during the Occupy movement through narratives emerging from social media over time? When an NYPD office pepper sprays peaceful protestors, the event is immediately captured on camera phones with subsequent citizen

Project team: James, Karen, Suzanne, Lara, Hanna, and Peter. We’re using the web service Topsy and a Ruby script to search for tweets that document police misconduct or benevolence, can be traced back to a specific officer, and are related

Project team: James, Karen, Suzanne, Lara, Hanna, and Peter. We’re using the web service Topsy and a Ruby script to search for tweets that document police misconduct or benevolence, can be traced back to a specific officer, and are related

From the Occupy Research Demographic and Political Participation Survey, question #42, “What are you trying to achieve with your participation in the Occupy Movement?” All responses are included, and this visualization shows the 50 most frequently used words (excluding the very

From the Occupy Research Demographic and Political Participation Survey, question #42, “What are you trying to achieve with your participation in the Occupy Movement?” All responses are included, and this visualization shows the 50 most frequently used words (excluding the very

Group 1: State and Space We’re using the web service Topsy to search for tweets related to Occupy events and police actions, positive and negative. After cleaning the tweets of web noise, e.g. http://, we visualize the prominence of particular keywords

Group 1: State and Space We’re using the web service Topsy to search for tweets related to Occupy events and police actions, positive and negative. After cleaning the tweets of web noise, e.g. http://, we visualize the prominence of particular keywords